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The Four Freshmen, Student Senate-sponsored Big
The Lettermen, who were unable to fulfill the terms
Name Entertainment, will appear May 14 at 8 p.m. of their contract with NSC because of the ilnnes of
in the Aberdeen Civic Arena. This number one vocal
one of the members. Northern will be admitted on
and instrumental group has been engaged to replace
their activity tickets.
Sandor Konya Of Met Opera Will Appear
In Last Community Concert Tuesday Night
Gary Drake, Watertown junior, and Louise Carlson, Brandon sophomore,
have been selected by the newly elected Student Senate Officers to head the
1965-66 Social Affairs Committee. Anyone interested in being a member of
this committee is asked to get Isis application in before May 14.
The Exponent
Volume 64, No. 29 Northern State College — Aberdeen, South Dakota May 13, 1965
Northernites Visit
Leadership Meeting
Delegates for ten colleges includ-ing
Northern attended the third an-nual
Tri-State Small College Leader-ship
Conference held at Bemidji State
College, Bemidji, Minn., May 6, 7 and
8.
Students attending the conference
from Northern were the newly elected
student senate officers: Gregg Wiitala,
Murray Woulfe, Dennis Adams and
Jim Hauck. Joan Breske, Exponent
editor, and Don Vogt, advisor of the
student senate, also attended the con-vention.
The conference began with registra-tion
Thursday night. Friday the dele-gates
divided into discussion groups
dealing with freedom of student de-monstrations
on campus, apathy and
elections, student evaluations of facul-ty
and administration, student restric-tions
and regulations, intellectual acti-vities
on campus and social problems
and morals on campus.
South Dakota colleges which were
represented were Northern, Black Hills
State College and Dakota Wesleyan
University. North Dakota colleges
which sent delegates were Dickinson
State College, Wahpeton School of
Science, Mayville State College and
Valley City State College. The three
Minnesota colleges which sent dele-gates
were Bemidji, Winona State and
Dr. Martin Luther College.
State YGOP Elect
Redfield Treasurer
Young Republicans returned victor-ious
from the convention at Sioux
Falls last weekend. They elected Jim
Redfield as treasurer of the South
Dakota College Federation.
The annual election meeting of the
club will be held Thursday at 7 p.m.
in the Union. Thus far, candidates
for chairman are Dennis Clarke and
Brent Palmer; vice chairman, Dick
Froiland and Chuck Howe; vice chair-woman,
Connie Meriweather; secre-tary,
Mary Rickenbach; and treasurer,
Terry Bauer and Jim Redfield.
It is important that all members
attend and cast their vote at tonight's
meeting.
Faculty Approves
Selection Of Name
McArthur-Welsh Hall is the pro-posed
name for the $600,000 girls
dormitory. The name was a unanimous
choice of the faculty. Plans for con-struction
will get under way this
summer.
Miss Grace McArthur, professor of
Music, has been a member of the Nor-thern
faculty since 1928. Miss Eme-line
Welsh, now retired, served as
assistant professor of English from
1931-1963.
SCOPE, a new directory of sum-mer
opportunities for college students
in community service is now available
in a limited supply for student use.
Four free copies are available at the
Exponent office for any interested
students. One copy will be kept in
the office for reference use; any stu-dents
interested in community service
jobs may take advantage of it.
There are 96 organizations with
27,000 openings listed in SCOPE. The
opportunities range from voter edu-cation
projects in the South and reli-
Sandor Konya, celebrated tenor of
the Metropolitan Opera, will appear
in the Civic Theater May 18, as the
last in the 1964-65 Community Con-cert
series. The program will begin at
7:15. Konya, a master who can sing
German, French and Italian opera,
was born on the Hungarian plains in
1923. He started his vocal studies at
the age of seventeen, and was later
drafted into the Hungarian Army. His
unit was captured by the British, and
Students Compete
For Music Awards
High school seniors from around
the Aberdeen area came to NSC to
compete for the Halvorson Memorial
May 3. The contest is sponsored an-nually
by the Aberdeen Rotary Club
for students planning to major in
music.
The scholarships, awarded to five
students, included $200 for tuition
plus free music lessons for one year.
Winners were Francine Day, Redfield;
Ted Frazer, Ashley, North Dakota;
Gloria Gab, Mobridge; Mary Ellen
Nelson, Britton; and Mary Jo Thomp-son,
Aberdeen. Alternates were Dar-win
Hansen, South Shore, and Geral-dine
Walters, Dell Rapids. All stu-dents
competed on various instru-ments
and in voice, or a combination
of the two.
The awards were announced at a
dinner for contestants and their par-ents.
glom action in the various denomina-tions
to projects of the social work
category in the North.
Many of the jobs offer no remuner-ation
other than the satisfaction of
seeing a necessary job well done;
others pay with room and board and/
or a small wage.
Students interested in Social Work
might find that the majority of the
jobs listed in SCOPE would be bene-ficial
experiences. At any rate, it
contains many ideas and sources for
summer employment in community
service.
Vocalists Here
Friday Evening
In Civic Arena
The Four Freshmen will appear
May 14 at 8 p.m. in the Civic Arena.
Tickets are on sale today in the
Union Ballroom, as well as at a
number of downtown stores, at $1.50
for adults. Northern students may ob-tain
tickets by presenting their acti-vity
tickets in the Ballroom.
The quartet, rated the number one
vocal and instrumental group in the
United States, has performed at every
major college in this country and
abroad. Its members are Bob Flan-nigan,
Ken Albers, Ross Barbour and
Don Barbour. They accompany them-selves,
each playing more than one
instrument.
The group's recent publicity release
stated that "although their name sug-gests
a group of students, these ima-ginative
four no longer attend an in-stitution;
they have become one."
The Four Freshmen are being spon-sored
by the Student Senate's Big
Name Entertainment Fund.
The Mobile X-ray Unit will be
located on the new Vogele Clinic
lots at Main and 12th Avenue
South May 19, 20 and 21. Any
staff member or student may se-cure
a free chest X-ray on those
days. Students must be at least
18 years of age.
Show Will Feature
Pops Concert, Art
Sunday and Monday, May 16-17,
are the dates for the annual NSC
Spring Art show sponsored by the
Fine Arts Department. The entire art
department will exhibit work and the
music department will present a "Pop"
Concert.
Guided tours will be conducted by
the art students from NAEA and
Delta Phi Delta during the Open
House Sunday from 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.
Faculty and classroom work will be
on display and twelve seniors will
have one-man shows. The twelve are
Dwight Eichelberg, Stan Kruger,
Marlys Gehring, John Gustafson,
Glenn Kirschexunan, Ken Kucker,
Thomas Schmidt, Ken Tieszen, Ken
Binder, Tom Piper, Bob Preszler and
Judy Bamesburger.
At 3 p.m. an All American Music
Concert will be presented by SAI
and Sinfonia in the Administration
Auditorium.
Monday from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m.
students and visitors will be able to
view, in process, the art classes of
Mrs. Schwarz, Mr. Lauver, and Mr.
Holaday. At 8 p.m., the music depart-ment
will present a "Pop" Concert
in Dacotah Hall
Ken Kucker is general chairman for
the Art Show. Co-chairmen, Marlys
Gehring and Dave Sebring are help-ing
bins.
Carlson And Drake
Head '65-'66 SAC
Social Affairs Committee co-chair-men
for the coming year are Louise
Carlson, Brandon sophomore, and
Gary Drake, Watertown junior. They
will replace the co-chairmen of the
past year, Virginia Theeler and Jim
Fischer.
The new co-chairmen are searching
for enthusiastic Northernites to com-plete
their committee. Any interested
student should submit his name, ad-dress,
student classification, activities
and a brief statement of why he
would like to serve on SAC. This in-formation
should be sent or delivered
in person to Miss Carlson in Lindberg
Hall or Drake at Seymour Hall no
later than Friday, May 14, at noon.
the young singer spent several months
in internment.
After the war, Konya remained in
Germany where he continued his
studies. He eagerly accepted every
opportunity to sing in opera produc-tions
when a tenor was needed. With
a preference for Italian opera, Konya
spent several summers in Italy where
he perfected his bel canto style.
The turning point in his career
came when he was accepted for the
part of Lohengrin, the most lyrical
of Wagner operas. After this success,
he became an internationally sought-after
singer. In 1960, he made his
America debut with the San Francis-co
Opera, and in 1961 he reached the
goal of every singer. He was chosen
for the Metropolitan Opera in his
celebrated role of Lohengrin. He has
sung the role more than 200 times
under the most celebrated conductors
of this generation. Sandor Konya's
repertoire is composed of 54 roles.
One of Konya's significant assets
is his ability to "look the part."
Earlier in his life he supported himself
by doing heavy physical labor; thus
he has built himself into a rugged,
athletic figure.
Away from the stage, Sandor Konya
is a man with a good sense of humor
and a refreshingly down-to-earth ap-proach
to his work. He enjoys life
with a youthful enthusiasm.
In June of 1964, Konya returned
to his native Hungary for the first
time in 20 years. He returned to the
United States to appear in the 1964-
65 Metropolitan Opera season in a
new production, which also starred
Joan Sutherland.
This will be the last opportunity
to take advantage of this series. All
students and faculty will be admitted
by their activity tickets.
Board Of Regents
Explains Tuition Fee
No tuition for extra-curricular acti-vities
will be assessed against Northern
State students next year.
The Board of Regents made a rul-ing
at their April meeting that one
semester hour can be earned for
extra-curricular activity without
charge, but no more than four of
these credits can be earned during
his college career.
Students participating in band,
athletics, chorus and so on will not
be assessed for these credits unless
they exceed a total of four credits.
Listing Of Job Opportunities
Is Available For Student Use

The Four Freshmen, Student Senate-sponsored Big
The Lettermen, who were unable to fulfill the terms
Name Entertainment, will appear May 14 at 8 p.m. of their contract with NSC because of the ilnnes of
in the Aberdeen Civic Arena. This number one vocal
one of the members. Northern will be admitted on
and instrumental group has been engaged to replace
their activity tickets.
Sandor Konya Of Met Opera Will Appear
In Last Community Concert Tuesday Night
Gary Drake, Watertown junior, and Louise Carlson, Brandon sophomore,
have been selected by the newly elected Student Senate Officers to head the
1965-66 Social Affairs Committee. Anyone interested in being a member of
this committee is asked to get Isis application in before May 14.
The Exponent
Volume 64, No. 29 Northern State College — Aberdeen, South Dakota May 13, 1965
Northernites Visit
Leadership Meeting
Delegates for ten colleges includ-ing
Northern attended the third an-nual
Tri-State Small College Leader-ship
Conference held at Bemidji State
College, Bemidji, Minn., May 6, 7 and
8.
Students attending the conference
from Northern were the newly elected
student senate officers: Gregg Wiitala,
Murray Woulfe, Dennis Adams and
Jim Hauck. Joan Breske, Exponent
editor, and Don Vogt, advisor of the
student senate, also attended the con-vention.
The conference began with registra-tion
Thursday night. Friday the dele-gates
divided into discussion groups
dealing with freedom of student de-monstrations
on campus, apathy and
elections, student evaluations of facul-ty
and administration, student restric-tions
and regulations, intellectual acti-vities
on campus and social problems
and morals on campus.
South Dakota colleges which were
represented were Northern, Black Hills
State College and Dakota Wesleyan
University. North Dakota colleges
which sent delegates were Dickinson
State College, Wahpeton School of
Science, Mayville State College and
Valley City State College. The three
Minnesota colleges which sent dele-gates
were Bemidji, Winona State and
Dr. Martin Luther College.
State YGOP Elect
Redfield Treasurer
Young Republicans returned victor-ious
from the convention at Sioux
Falls last weekend. They elected Jim
Redfield as treasurer of the South
Dakota College Federation.
The annual election meeting of the
club will be held Thursday at 7 p.m.
in the Union. Thus far, candidates
for chairman are Dennis Clarke and
Brent Palmer; vice chairman, Dick
Froiland and Chuck Howe; vice chair-woman,
Connie Meriweather; secre-tary,
Mary Rickenbach; and treasurer,
Terry Bauer and Jim Redfield.
It is important that all members
attend and cast their vote at tonight's
meeting.
Faculty Approves
Selection Of Name
McArthur-Welsh Hall is the pro-posed
name for the $600,000 girls
dormitory. The name was a unanimous
choice of the faculty. Plans for con-struction
will get under way this
summer.
Miss Grace McArthur, professor of
Music, has been a member of the Nor-thern
faculty since 1928. Miss Eme-line
Welsh, now retired, served as
assistant professor of English from
1931-1963.
SCOPE, a new directory of sum-mer
opportunities for college students
in community service is now available
in a limited supply for student use.
Four free copies are available at the
Exponent office for any interested
students. One copy will be kept in
the office for reference use; any stu-dents
interested in community service
jobs may take advantage of it.
There are 96 organizations with
27,000 openings listed in SCOPE. The
opportunities range from voter edu-cation
projects in the South and reli-
Sandor Konya, celebrated tenor of
the Metropolitan Opera, will appear
in the Civic Theater May 18, as the
last in the 1964-65 Community Con-cert
series. The program will begin at
7:15. Konya, a master who can sing
German, French and Italian opera,
was born on the Hungarian plains in
1923. He started his vocal studies at
the age of seventeen, and was later
drafted into the Hungarian Army. His
unit was captured by the British, and
Students Compete
For Music Awards
High school seniors from around
the Aberdeen area came to NSC to
compete for the Halvorson Memorial
May 3. The contest is sponsored an-nually
by the Aberdeen Rotary Club
for students planning to major in
music.
The scholarships, awarded to five
students, included $200 for tuition
plus free music lessons for one year.
Winners were Francine Day, Redfield;
Ted Frazer, Ashley, North Dakota;
Gloria Gab, Mobridge; Mary Ellen
Nelson, Britton; and Mary Jo Thomp-son,
Aberdeen. Alternates were Dar-win
Hansen, South Shore, and Geral-dine
Walters, Dell Rapids. All stu-dents
competed on various instru-ments
and in voice, or a combination
of the two.
The awards were announced at a
dinner for contestants and their par-ents.
glom action in the various denomina-tions
to projects of the social work
category in the North.
Many of the jobs offer no remuner-ation
other than the satisfaction of
seeing a necessary job well done;
others pay with room and board and/
or a small wage.
Students interested in Social Work
might find that the majority of the
jobs listed in SCOPE would be bene-ficial
experiences. At any rate, it
contains many ideas and sources for
summer employment in community
service.
Vocalists Here
Friday Evening
In Civic Arena
The Four Freshmen will appear
May 14 at 8 p.m. in the Civic Arena.
Tickets are on sale today in the
Union Ballroom, as well as at a
number of downtown stores, at $1.50
for adults. Northern students may ob-tain
tickets by presenting their acti-vity
tickets in the Ballroom.
The quartet, rated the number one
vocal and instrumental group in the
United States, has performed at every
major college in this country and
abroad. Its members are Bob Flan-nigan,
Ken Albers, Ross Barbour and
Don Barbour. They accompany them-selves,
each playing more than one
instrument.
The group's recent publicity release
stated that "although their name sug-gests
a group of students, these ima-ginative
four no longer attend an in-stitution;
they have become one."
The Four Freshmen are being spon-sored
by the Student Senate's Big
Name Entertainment Fund.
The Mobile X-ray Unit will be
located on the new Vogele Clinic
lots at Main and 12th Avenue
South May 19, 20 and 21. Any
staff member or student may se-cure
a free chest X-ray on those
days. Students must be at least
18 years of age.
Show Will Feature
Pops Concert, Art
Sunday and Monday, May 16-17,
are the dates for the annual NSC
Spring Art show sponsored by the
Fine Arts Department. The entire art
department will exhibit work and the
music department will present a "Pop"
Concert.
Guided tours will be conducted by
the art students from NAEA and
Delta Phi Delta during the Open
House Sunday from 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.
Faculty and classroom work will be
on display and twelve seniors will
have one-man shows. The twelve are
Dwight Eichelberg, Stan Kruger,
Marlys Gehring, John Gustafson,
Glenn Kirschexunan, Ken Kucker,
Thomas Schmidt, Ken Tieszen, Ken
Binder, Tom Piper, Bob Preszler and
Judy Bamesburger.
At 3 p.m. an All American Music
Concert will be presented by SAI
and Sinfonia in the Administration
Auditorium.
Monday from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m.
students and visitors will be able to
view, in process, the art classes of
Mrs. Schwarz, Mr. Lauver, and Mr.
Holaday. At 8 p.m., the music depart-ment
will present a "Pop" Concert
in Dacotah Hall
Ken Kucker is general chairman for
the Art Show. Co-chairmen, Marlys
Gehring and Dave Sebring are help-ing
bins.
Carlson And Drake
Head '65-'66 SAC
Social Affairs Committee co-chair-men
for the coming year are Louise
Carlson, Brandon sophomore, and
Gary Drake, Watertown junior. They
will replace the co-chairmen of the
past year, Virginia Theeler and Jim
Fischer.
The new co-chairmen are searching
for enthusiastic Northernites to com-plete
their committee. Any interested
student should submit his name, ad-dress,
student classification, activities
and a brief statement of why he
would like to serve on SAC. This in-formation
should be sent or delivered
in person to Miss Carlson in Lindberg
Hall or Drake at Seymour Hall no
later than Friday, May 14, at noon.
the young singer spent several months
in internment.
After the war, Konya remained in
Germany where he continued his
studies. He eagerly accepted every
opportunity to sing in opera produc-tions
when a tenor was needed. With
a preference for Italian opera, Konya
spent several summers in Italy where
he perfected his bel canto style.
The turning point in his career
came when he was accepted for the
part of Lohengrin, the most lyrical
of Wagner operas. After this success,
he became an internationally sought-after
singer. In 1960, he made his
America debut with the San Francis-co
Opera, and in 1961 he reached the
goal of every singer. He was chosen
for the Metropolitan Opera in his
celebrated role of Lohengrin. He has
sung the role more than 200 times
under the most celebrated conductors
of this generation. Sandor Konya's
repertoire is composed of 54 roles.
One of Konya's significant assets
is his ability to "look the part."
Earlier in his life he supported himself
by doing heavy physical labor; thus
he has built himself into a rugged,
athletic figure.
Away from the stage, Sandor Konya
is a man with a good sense of humor
and a refreshingly down-to-earth ap-proach
to his work. He enjoys life
with a youthful enthusiasm.
In June of 1964, Konya returned
to his native Hungary for the first
time in 20 years. He returned to the
United States to appear in the 1964-
65 Metropolitan Opera season in a
new production, which also starred
Joan Sutherland.
This will be the last opportunity
to take advantage of this series. All
students and faculty will be admitted
by their activity tickets.
Board Of Regents
Explains Tuition Fee
No tuition for extra-curricular acti-vities
will be assessed against Northern
State students next year.
The Board of Regents made a rul-ing
at their April meeting that one
semester hour can be earned for
extra-curricular activity without
charge, but no more than four of
these credits can be earned during
his college career.
Students participating in band,
athletics, chorus and so on will not
be assessed for these credits unless
they exceed a total of four credits.
Listing Of Job Opportunities
Is Available For Student Use